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L'Avenir (Belgian newspaper)

L'Avenir
L'Avenir est au Contenu
("The Future is in Content")
Owner(s)
Founder(s) René Delforge
Political alignment Regional Press
Headquarters Route de Hannut 38
5004
Circulation 94,000 (as of 2014)
Sister newspapers
Website www.lavenir.net

L'Avenir (literally, "The Future"), formerly Vers l'Avenir ("Towards the Future"), is a Belgian newspaper franchise based in Namur. It is one of the largest media groups in Belgium. The group publishes nine regional newspapers in French, grouped since June 2010 under the brand name L'Avenir.

The Namur daily newspaper Vers l'Avenir has been published since 19 November 1918. It succeeded the Catholic daily L'Ami de l'Ordre, published from August 6, 1839 to November 18, 1918. Namur was occupied by the German Army in August 1914, early in the First World War, and though the German administration permitted L'Ami de l'Ordre to continue publishing, they closely controlled the contents of the paper. The paper's management wavered between collaboration with the occupation and resistance to German troops. When the Armistice of 11 November 1918 was announced and the German troops evacuated the city, the Bishop of Namur, Monsignor Heylen, removed Victor Delvaux as publisher and negotiated a management contract with and leased the premises to René Delforge. Delforge, together with the elites of Namur's Catholic Party (Max Wasseige, Fernand Golenvaux, Henri Bribosia, Adrien de Montpellier and Albert d’Huart) founded a new Catholic newspaper Vers l'Avenir. Delvaux was forced to flee and though the Liege Court of Appeal acquitted him of collaboration offences in February 1922, a few months later Delvaux finally sold the premises and printing equipment to the bishop.

Vers l'Avenir survived the Second World War rather better than the first war and was in a position to expand from Namur. It founded or acquired newspapers in the region including L'Avenir du Luxembourg in 1948, Le Courrier (in Verviers) in 1956 and (Tournai, in 1965).

In May 1983, Vers l'Avenir launched its own radio on the 100.0 MHz frequency in the Namur region which broadcast until the early 1990s.


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